cnysa
(unpronouncible) is a module that allows you to see information about what the async_hooks
module is doing under the covers. AsyncResources
and their lifecycle events are displayed neatly in rows (see bottom for examples).
Pre-require cynsa/register
in your application:
node --require cynsa/register app.js
If cnysa.json
exists in the current working directory, it will be used as the configuration passed to the Cnysa
constructor as described below.
const { Cnysa } = require('cnysa');
Constructs a new Cnysa
instance.
Starts recording async events.
Stops recording async events.
Generate a special AsyncResource
with the given tag. If tag
is not specified, a monotonically increasing number is assigned to it.
The special AsyncResource
will be displayed as a single event in cyan. This is good for determining the current running async resource.
options.width
: Maximum number of characters to print on a single line before wrapping. Defaults to the current terminal width.options.ignoreTypes
: A string or RegExp to filter outAsyncResource
types.options.roots
: A list ofAsyncResource
IDs that must be an ancestor of a givenAsyncResource
for it to be displayed. The default value, an empty list, is equivalent to specifying no constraint on ancestry.options.padding
: Number that represents the amount of space between each depicted event.options.format
: A string that represents how the output should be formatted. Currently, the available options are'default'
and'svg'
(which usesansi-to-svg
).
Returns a formatted async ancestry tree. Great for printing in the console.
All options are optional.
options.ignoreTypes
: A string or RegExp to filter outAsyncResource
types.
Experimental. Returns a formatted async stack trace.
All options are optional.
Gets the most recently constructed Cnysa
instance. If none were constructed, one is constructed automatically and returned. Therefore, this method is guaranteed to return a Cnysa
instance.
This is useful when it is unknown whether cnysa
has been used earlier in the application, especially as a command-line require.
For each AsyncResource
, a timeline will be printed, with a number of colored symbols:
- Green
*
represents the async resource creation. - Red
*
represents its destruction. - Blue
{...}
represent running in an async scope. - Gray
-
indicates the lifetime of the resource creation, and is bookended by*
symbols. - Cyan
*
represents a location whereCnysa#mark
was called.
node --require cnysa/register -e " \
fs.readFile('package.json', (err, contents) => { \
require('cnysa').Cnysa.get().mark('hi'); \
})"